regnis78
paradsecar
regnis78

Will Hyundai/Kia...sorry: K(backwards “N”)/Genesis ever figure out how to incorporate wireless Andriod Auto/CarPlay into their larger screens? Only the base models with the smaller screens get this, otherwise it’s wired. I figure that would be a no-brainer in 2022, but what do I know?

It’s been beat to death, but it’s the only car that 95% of people need 95% of the time: Honda Fit.

We are a Toyota Tribe. Former rides: Corolla, Tercel, Cellica, MR2 Spyder. Current: 4Runner, Camry, and Prius. We discovered after years of bad luck with other manufacturers its tough to beat Toyota’s trifecta of quality, reliability, and affordability.

Any tiny, FWD “Crossover SUV” like the Nissan Kicks, Toyota C-HR, etc. Let’s stop pretending and call it what it really is: a slightly lifted hatchback.

F1 at COTA.  I’m curious to see what improvements have been made post-resurfacing.

What about the RSX in the picture?  I think that screams “non-douche that knows how to have a good time” better than any car I can think of.

3rd Gear: The Bolt is kinda, sorta affordable-ish.

2023 Acura Integra. I have the choice between a manual locked behind a paywall or a...CVT.  Huh?

For nearly the same price I could buy yesterday’s Maserati convertible. I know which one I’d rather have. ND

If you ever need reminding, fire up Breaking Bad and it’s litany of iconic cars. The Jeep Commander was driven by Walt’s DEA brother-in-law, Hank. It pretty much typifies the type of person Jeep was going after with this thing.

The 80's station wagon (don’t know which one...I was way too young) my friend’s mom transported us to school in when it was her time to carpool. We always sat in the cargo area jump seats because we thought it was cool (and to make obscene gestures at the drivers following us because we were brats). Not that they were

When I was 15 and in driver’s ed, I was determined not to be some chump. I got in the driver’s seat of that 1994 Chevy Corsica full of confidence, fastened my seat belt, and hit the gas. Too bad I forgot one crucial step: put the car in Drive. The engine revved all the way up to the fuel cut-off, I turned bright red,

My teal 1995 Honda Civic Coupe: Jellybean. Because, well...look at it:

3rd Gear: “[I]t’s not lipstick on a pig”. Soooo...what he’s saying is Nissan’s cars are pigs, and he wants to do more to their pig vehicles than just put lipstick on them. Normally not something you would normally hear out of a C-suite executive’s mouth when talking about their own product, but hey, everyone is

A neon license plate bracket on my 1995 Dodge (you guessed it)... Neon. Nothing screams sixteen year old player like an accessory that bears the same name as the model of the car you drive.

Pontiac LeMans, which was just a rebadged Daewoo LeMans. My family had one of these turds that typified the lazy phone-in subcompact effort popular with GM in the 80's and 90's.

Any car that isn’t yours (e.g. rental car, company car, etc.). I used to work for a rental car company and and you can wring a bundle of fun out of something unlikely like a 15 passenger van or a Chevrolet Metro if you push it hard enough.

My reaction to someone telling me in 20 years I can’t buy a Miata or GR86 without a stick: “Interesting, now leave me alone”.

Right? It’s like an amalgamation of every 80’s stereotype you could possibly fit into one minute. It baffles me who their intended target market was: Men? Women? Men that want to buy a car that allegedly women think is cool, and therefore would think they are hot shit by proxy? The world may never know…

Now playing

They must have used the same ad agency as Ford. Watch at your own risk: